Mr. Griffin. Sure.
Mr. Meyers. I just paid no attention to it.
Mr. Griffin. While you were at the club on Thursday night, did Jack mention anything to you about the President’s expected arrival in Dallas the following day?
Mr. Meyers. I don’t even remember this. This is absolute fact. I have no recollection.
Mr. Griffin. Do you have any recollection of his having mentioned it later when you met him at the Bon Vivant Room?
Mr. Meyers. It did come up. I remember this very distinctly. It came up but it came up in an aroundabout way and I will tell you how that happened if you want me to do that now.
Mr. Griffin. First of all let me ask one further question. Is there anything else you remember about what happened at the Carousel Club on Thursday night?
Mr. Meyers. He was supremely upset. I remember this. He was very angry at one of the girls who had worked for him who he—now, this is his story. You know this again comes back to me. His story is that this girl—she was his star performer, I suppose, and had a sensational act and evidently there was some local objection to some of her act from the standpoint of decency thing. So he had asked her would she please tone down her act so that he would have no problem with the authorities, as far as performance was concerned, and that she had defied him and did the act as she had always done it, and possibly even a little more so. So he fired her. He let her go. Now this is his story to me.
Mr. Griffin. Did this conversation occur Thursday night or was it one you had earlier?
Mr. Meyers. I am almost sure it was Thursday night, but it might have been earlier. You see, it is confusing.